Awesome
Laravel Language Detector
This package provides an easy way to detect and apply the language for your application using browser preferences, subdomains or route prefixes.
Installation
Require the package using composer:
composer require vluzrmos/language-detector
Add the service provider as follows:
Laravel
Edit your config/app.php
:
Insert this line of code above the listed RouteServiceProvider, ex:
Vluzrmos\LanguageDetector\Providers\LanguageDetectorServiceProvider::class,
App\Providers\RouteServiceProvider::class,
::class notation is optional.
Lumen
Edit the bootstrap/app.php
:
$app->register(Vluzrmos\LanguageDetector\Providers\LanguageDetectorServiceProvider::class);
::class notation is optional.
Configuration
Two options for Laravel, either publish the package configuration using:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Vluzrmos\LanguageDetector\Providers\LanguageDetectorServiceProvider"
then edit the new config/lang-detector.php
file or add the following lines to your .env file:
#Indicates whether the language should be autodetected (can be removed)
LANG_DETECTOR_AUTODETECT=true
#Driver to use, the default is browser
LANG_DETECTOR_DRIVER="browser"
#Segment to use in the uri or subdomain driver, default 0 (can be removed)
LANG_DETECTOR_SEGMENT=0
#Name of cookie to cache the detected language (use false|null to disable)
LANG_DETECTOR_COOKIE=locale
#Comma-separated list of languages provided on the app
LANG_DETECTOR_LANGUAGES="en,fr,pt_BR"
#To alias the language use the notation ":", "=", ":=" or "=>" to separate the alias and its value.
# LANG_DETECTOR_LANGUAGES="en, en-us:en, pt-br:pt_BR"
If you not want to use that, just publish the configurations of the package with
php artisan vendor:publish
and edit on config/lang-detector.php
generated.
For Lumen, consider to copy vendor/vluzrmos/language-detector/config/lang-detector.php
to your configs dir and use $app->configure('lang-detector')
before register the
LanguageDetectorServiceProvider
.
Detector Drivers
There are a few drivers that you might to use, choose one which matches with your application design:
Browser Preferences
The driver browser
will try to detect the language of the application based on the request languages (browser preferences). This driver doesn't need any other configuration, just configure the available languages.
Subdomains
The driver subdomain
will try to detect the language of the application which matches with subdomain of the hostname.
eg.:
http://fr.site.domain
The subdomain
driver will detect language fr
and set the application to fr
if it is one of the available languages in the lang-detector
config file.
Note: subdomain and uri drivers require aliases of the the language-locales in the lang-detector config file.
Route Prefixes
The driver uri
will try to detect the language based on the route prefix:
http://site.domain/en-us/home
That driver will detect en-us and set it to the application. (Note: Consider to aliase that locale)
And don't worry, if the url is like:
http://site.domain/home
The language will not be changed, the application will use your default language configured on your config/app.php
file.
With uri
driver, your route group needs be like this:
//That would be nice if you put (edit) it on your App\Providers\RouteServiceProvider.
// Laravel
Route::group(['prefix' => app('language.routePrefix'), 'namespace' => 'App\Http\Controllers'], function ($router) {
require __DIR__.'/../Http/routes.php';
});
//For lumen, it should be on bootstrap/app.php.
// Lumen
$app->group(['prefix' => app('language.routePrefix'), 'namespace' => 'App\Http\Controllers'], function ($app) {
require __DIR__.'/../app/Http/routes.php';
}
Issue: Lumen 5.0 doesn't support route prefix with empty strings, you should use that script:
$prefix = app('language.routePrefix');
$options = [];
if (!empty($prefix) && $prefix!="/") {
$options['prefix'] = $prefix;
}
// any other options here
$options['namespace'] = 'App\Http\Controllers';
$app->group($options, function () use($app) {
// ...
});
Note: That is only for Lumen 5.0, the newest version (5.1) already fixes it.
Aliasing language locales
You might to use the style lang_LOCALE
or just lang
on your resources/lang
dir.
The language detector driver you have chosen will try to detect the language
which matches with lang
or lang_LOCALE
available on your config/lang-detector.php
.
'languages' => ['en', 'pt_BR' ...]
example:
├── lang
│ ├── en
│ │ ├── messages.php
│ │ └── validation.php
│ └── pt_BR
│ ├── messages.php
│ └── validation.php
If you are not following that style of languages names or if you are using
the subdomain
or uri
drivers, just configure it on config/lang-detector.php
file:
'languages' => [
'pt_BR' => 'pt-BR', //will detect pt_BR language, and set pt-BR to the application,
'pt' => 'pt-BR', //aliasing, will detect pt and set pt-BR to the application
'pt-br' => "pt-BR", //aliasing, will detect pt-br and set pt-BR to the application (you will need it with subdomain driver)
'en', //will detect 'en' language
]
or if you are using .env
instead of config file:
#Just put the languages in a comma-separated string.
#To aliase the language use the notation ":", "=", ":=" or "=>" to separate the alias and its value.
LANG_DETECTOR_LANGUAGES="pt_BR:pt-BR, pt:pt-BR, pt-br:pt-BR, en"
Suggestions
The default Laravel language lines are available translated into 51 languages here:
If you want to translate your models you can use this package:
License
MIT.